Now Available: Multiple Myeloma Luciferase Cell Lines

Imanis Life Sciences

Menu

Firefly Luciferase

For noninvasive in vivo optical imaging


Firefly luciferase (Fluc, Luc2), initially isolated from the firefly Photinus pyralis, is an enzyme that catalyzes the oxygenation of d-luciferin to oxyluciferin, producing visible light (530-640 nm). Several generations of Fluc have been engineered, each improving brightness. Unless otherwise specified, Imanis Fluc products have the Luc2 version of the protein (footnote), a highly optimized variant with exceptional brightness.

The bioluminescence produced by Fluc facilitates noninvasive optical imaging following the administration of d-luciferin.

How to use Luciferase for imaging


Reagents: d-luciferin

Equipment: An optical imager equipped with cooled CCD cameras can be used to detect the light produced by the oxidation of d-luciferin. The acquired bioluminescent image can be overlayed with a photograph taken by the optical imager to show the relative location of the bioluminescent signal.

Additional considerations: Bioluminescence peaks about 10-12 min after the administration of d-luciferin and slowly drops.

Workflow:

When to use luciferase


Bioluminescent imaging with Fluc can be used to noninvasively track the biodistribution of cells or viruses in pre-clinical regenerative medicine, gene therapy, oncology, and oncolytic virotherapy studies. Background bioluminescence of tissues is very low, so Fluc imaging has a very good signal to background ratio and excellent sensitivity in mice and other small animals, where the signal is relatively close (1-2 cm) to the surface of the animal. Thus, Fluc imaging is ideal for studies requiring the detection of a low number of cells or viruses. D-luciferin readily crosses the blood brain barrier, so Fluc can be used for imaging in the brain and CNS.

Learn More